Articles originally appeared in Preserving the Recent Past 1 and 2, published by the Historic Preservation Education Foundation with the National Park Service and the Association for Preservation Technology International, Washington, DC, 1995 and 2000.

Reference Services and Specialized Repositories:

The Catalog of Landscape Records in the United States (www.wavehill.org/catalog)
A national catalog designed to assist researchers records and repositories
documenting the work of landscape architects and landscape architectural
firms in the United States. Catalog publishes a quarterly newsletter
featuring special collections, advances in records management such as
planning digital collections, and researcher queries.

US COPAR/Cooperative Preservation of Architectural Records. A national
network of state or regional committees committed to the preservation
of architectural records. A national Newsletter for COPAR was published
from 1980-1985 and 1996-1997. Regional guides to architects and architectural
firms have been published for New York City, Chicago, Boston, and Philadelphia.
A nationwide list of state and regional committees is maintained by
the Massachusetts committee and is available electronically (http://libraries.mit.edu/rvc/mcopar/coparcontactinfo.html).
National inquiries should be addressed to:

U.S. Geological Survey (http://mapping.usgs.gov)
makes available U.S.G.S topographic maps. As part of the Global Land
Information System (GLIS), it also makes available the aerial surveys,
called digital orthophoto quadrangles or DEQ's, used to revise digital
line graphs and topographic maps (http://earthexplorer.usgs.gov).

VAF/Vernacular Architecture Forum
maintains a link to a bibliography of published writings on topics such
as vernacular housing, landscape design, and planning. Organization
regularly publishes a newsletter which contains current bibliography.
Proceedings of annual meetings are published periodically by the University
of Tennessee Press, Knoxville, and University of Missouri Press, Columbia.

Library of Congress maintains an extensive library
collection, including books, periodicals, prints and photographs, maps,
and microform versions of collections in other repositories. A catalog
of bibliographical references and a number of research tools are available
online. The Manuscripts Division contains the Frederick Law Olmsted
Papers and records of the American Civic Association. Prints and Photographs
Collection maintains many original materials and offers an online catalog
of many of its holdings; its holdings include the maps of the Sanborn
Fire Insurance Company, which are currently being digitized (along with
those maintained by the Bureau of Census) and are being made available
to libraries on cdrom by a private vendor. A complete set of Garden
and Forest is available online (lcweb.loc.gov/preserv/prd/gardfor).

Library of the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Washington,
D.C.. Extensive collection of literature on the history
of suburbanization and housing in the United States, including the multi-volume
Proceedings of President's Conference on Home Building and Home Ownership
(1932) and technical bulletins, circulars, and manuals published by
the Federal Housing Administration in the 1930s and 1940s.

Olmsted Archives/Frederick Law Olmsted National Historical Site, 99
Warren Street, Brookline, Massachusetts 02445 (www.nps.gov/frla/).
Collection includes general plans and drawings for the firm's many subdivisions.
Selected finding aids and guides to the collection are available. A
reference volume listing Olmsted projects, The Master List of Design
Projects of the Olmsted Firm, 1857-1950 (1987), has been published by
the National Association for Olmsted Parks, 1987.

Horticulture Branch Library, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.(www.si.edu/info/libraries-archives).
Library of books, trade catalogs, and periodicals related to history
of horticulture and landscape design in the United States. Also includes
the Archives of American Gardens, an ongoing project of the Garden Club
of America, to document American gardens through digitized photographic
collection of gardens (www.si.edu/gardens/aag.html).

Division of Rare Books and Manuscripts Collection, Cornell University,
Ithaca, New York (http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/collections/).
A special collection of manuscripts, drawings, blueprints, and other
records pertaining to landscape architecture, architecture and city
planning, includes records of masters of design such as John Nolen and
Clarence Stein, as well as records of the Regional Plan Association
responsible for the New York Regional Plan of the 1920s.

National Agricultural Research Library, Beltsville, Maryland (www.nal.usda.gov/).
Extensive library of books on agriculture, horticulture, and landscape
architecture,and circulars and bulletins produced nationwide by agricultural
extension services and agricultural research stations, including those
on home landscaping, roadside plantings, and village improvements. Online
catalog, Agricola, is available (www.nal.usda.gov/ag98/english/catalog-basic.html).

Environmental Design Archives, University of California, Berkeley (www.ced.berkley.edu/cedarchives/).
Collections document the work of many prominent West Coast architects
and landscape architects, including Julia Morgan, Charles Sumner Greene,
Garrett Eckbo, Thomas D. Church, and William Wurster. An index describing
each collection and providing biographical and bibliographical information
is available .

Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library, Columbia University (www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/indiv/avery).
Extensive collection of books, catalogs, plans, periodicals, and oral
history collections covering themes in architecture, planning, landscape
architecture, and New York area development. Many of the Avery's extensive
collection of trade catalogs, architectural guides, and periodicals
are available in microform in major libraries.

Frances Loeb Library, Harvard University, Graduate School of Design,
Cambridge, Massachusetts. (www.gsd.harvard.edu//library/special
collections.html). Special collections include manuscripts, drawings,
and plans by a number of noted architects, planners, and landscape architects,
including Arthur C. Comey, Eleanor Raymond, Charles Mulford Robinson,
Hugh Stubbins, Arthur Shurcliff, Dan Kiley, Robert H. Whitten, Walter
Gropius, and John C. Olmsted. Also includes the photographs of photojournalist
Jessie Tarbox Beals, including numerous views of residences and gardens.

Dumbarton Oaks Research Library, Washington, D.C. (www.doaks.org/).
Contains an extensive collection of books and periodicals on landscape
architecture and horticulture.

Library of the Arnold Arboretum, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts (www.icls.harvard.edu/).
In conjunction with the Institute for Cultural Landscape Studies, the
library maintains an expanding collection of works in landscape conservation,
design, history, management, and preservation, particularly related
to activities in the northeastern United States.

Winterthur Library and Archives, Wilmington, Delaware (www.winterthur.org/index-library.html).
Major library of American domestic design, especially furniture and
furnishings. Printed Books and Periodicals Collection contains an extensive
collection of home and garden magazines.

Philadelphia Architects and Buildings Project, Philadephia, Pennsylvania
(www.philadelphiabuildings.org).
A richly illustrated, web-based database providing free public access
to information on the Philadelphia region's built environment and on
the work of Philadelphia-based architects. Project is jointly sponsored
by The Athenaeum of Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Architectural
Archives, Philadelphia Historical Commission, and Pennsylvania Historical
and Museum Commission.

Eichler Network (www.eichlernetwork.com).
California-based organization provides technical information about history
and home repair to owners of homes built by merchant Builder Joseph
Eichler. In addition to website, network publishes a regular newsletter.

National Archives and Record Centers (www.nara.gov).
Several record groups (R.G.) contain information about federal housing
programs as well as a wealth of statistical and research data acquired
on local housing trends, methods of home construction, and home financing.
Although most records are located in Archives II in College Park, Maryland,
additional records may exist in regional repositories. Preliminary inventories
(P.I.) are available on-line and in published form for most record groups.

Records of the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), dating from 1934,
are found in R.G. 31 (P.I. 111, 1965, and P.I. 45, 1952) and includes
selected applications for FHA-approved homes, cartographic and written
records pertaining to selected examples of FHA-insured, large-scale
rental housing complexes, and real estate survey records and rating
maps. Records include a representative group of applications for FHA
mortgage approval. Unfortunately many of the administrative files for
FHA's early years have been lost.

Records of the Emergency Fleet Corporation of the U.S. Shipping Board
are found in R.G. 32 (P.I. 97, 1956) and the U.S. Housing Authority
of the U.S. Department of Labor are found in R.G. 3 (P.I. 140,1962)
include textual, cartographic, and photographic records of World War
I emergency housing, 1918-19.

Records for the National Housing Administration established in 1942
to consolidate all federal housing programs (U.S. Public Housing Authority,
Federal Housing Administration, Federal Home Loan Bank Board, and World
War II housing programs) into one agency are found in the Records of
the Housing and Home Finance Agency, R.G. 207 (P.I. 164). These include
FHA files on housing statistics and market analyses as well as the records
of the Central Housing Committee which was established in 1935 upon
the recommendation of the National Resources Board and served as a clearinghouse
on all matters pertaining to housing, including land use, prefabricated
methods of construction, and financing.

Records of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board are found in R.G. 195 (P.I.
NC-94, 1965, manuscript form); cartographic records include several
hundred small house designs approved for use by the Federal Home Building
Service Plan, 1938-1942. Records of Defense Homes Corporation, 1940-1949,
are among the Records of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation in R.G.
234. Records of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
are found in R.G. ((?)). Records for the U.S. Census Records are found
in R.G. 29. Records of the U.S. Department of Commerce, in R.G. 167
contain the records of the National Bureau of Standards and the President's
Conference on Home Building and Ownership, 1930-33.

Historic Periodicals:

Popular Magazines

American Builder
The American Home
American Homes and Gardens
Better Homes and Gardens
Building Age (later Building Age and The Builder's Journal)
Bungalow Magazine
California Arts and Architecture
California Garden
Carpentry and Building
Cosmopolitan
Country Life in America
The Craftsman
Delineator
The Family Circle and Parlor Annual (The Family Circle)
Garden and Forest
The Garden Magazine (Garden Magazine and Home Builder)
Gardener's Monthly and Horticulturist
Good Housekeeping
Harper's Monthly
The Horticulturist
The House Beautiful
House and Garden
Hovey's Magazine of Horticulture
Keith's Magazine
Ladies' Home Journal
Living Magazine
McCall's
National Builder
Parents' Magazine
Park and Cemetery and Landscape Gardening
Scribner's Magazine
The Small House
Sunset Magazine
Woman's Home Companion
Western Horticultural Review (Horticultural Review and Botanical Magazine)

Professional and Trade Periodicals

American Architect
American Architect and Building News
American Builder
American Carpenter and Builder
American City
American Civic and Planning Annual
American Garden
Annals of Real Estate Practice
Architectural Forum (formerly Brickbuilder)
Architectural Record
Architectural Review and American Builder's Journal
Arts and Architecture
City Planning
Historical Garden Club of America bulletins
Historical Journal of the New England Garden History Society
House and Home
Housing
Inland Architect
Insured Mortgage Portfolio
Landscape Architecture
NAHB Builder
National Real Estate Journal
Perfect Home
Popular Home
Professional Builder
Progressive Architecture (formerly Pencil Points)
Regional Planning Notes
Southwest Builders and Contractors
Urban Land Institute Bulletin
Western Architect

Hitchcock, Henry-Russell. American Architectural Books: A List of Books,
Portfolios and Pamphlets on Architecture and Related Subjects Published
in the United States before 1895. New York: DaCapo Press, 1976.

Howe, Barbara J., Dolores A. Fleming, Emory L. Kemp, and Ruth Ann Overbeck.
House and Homes: Exploring Their History. The Nearby History Series.
Nashville, Tenn.: American Association for State and Local History,
1987.

_____. A Field Guide to American Houses. New York: Alfred A. Knopf,
1991.

McClelland, Linda Flint. "Gateway to the Past: Establishing a Landscape's
Context for the National Register." In The Landscape Universe: Historic
Designed Landscapes in Context, ed. Charles Birnbaum. Wave Hill, New
York: Catalog of Landscape Records in the United States and the National
Park Service, 1994.

Sommer, Barbara W., and Mary Kay Quinlan. "A Guide to Oral History
Interviews." Technical Leaflet #210, included in History News, vol.
55, number 3, summer 2000. Nashville, Tenn.: American Association of
State and Local History, 2000.

Gardner, Todd. "The Slow Wave: The Changing Residential Status of Cities
and Suburbs in the United States, 1850-1940." In North American Cities
and Suburbs, ed. Richard Harris. Special Issue. Journal of Urban History
27, no. 3 (March 2001): 293-312.

Harris, Richard. "American Suburbs: A Sketch of a New Interpretation."
Journal of Urban History 15, no. 1 (November 1988): 98-103.

_____. "Working-Class Home Ownership in the American Metropolis."
Journal of Urban History 17, no. 1 (November 1990): 46-9.

_____. "The Unplanned Blue-Collar Suburb in Its Heyday." In Geographical
Snapshots of North America, ed. Donald G. Janelle. New York: Guilford
Press, 1992.

_____. North American Cities and Suburbs. Special Issue. Journal of
Urban History 27, no. 3 (March 2001).

Harris, Richard, and Robert Lewis. "The Geography of North American
Cities and Suburbs, 1900-1950: A New Synthesis." In North American Cities
and Suburbs, ed. Richard Harris. Special Issue. Journal of Urban History
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_____. "Moving Beyond Scholarly Orthodoxies in North American Suburban
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Sies, Mary C. "North American Suburbs, 1880-1950: Cultural and Social
Reconsiderations." In North American Cities and Suburbs, ed. Richard
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313-46.

Topalov, Christian. "Scientific Urban Planning and the Ordering of
Daily Life: The First 'War Housing' Experiment in the United States,
1917-1919." Journal of Urban History 17, no. 1 (November 1990): 14-45.

_____. "Radburn and the American Planning Movement: The Persistence
of an Idea," Introduction to Planning History in the United States,
ed. Donald A. Krueckeberg. New Brunswick: Center for Urban Policy Research,
Rutgers University, 1983.

Burgess, Patricia. Planning for Private Interest: Land Use Controls
and Residential Patterns in Columbus, Ohio, 1900-1970. Columbus: Ohio
State University Press, 1994.

Christensen, Carol A. The American Garden City and the New Towns Movement.
Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Research Press, 1986.

Clawson, Marion. Suburban Land Conversion in the United States: An
Economic and Government Process. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University
Press, 1971.

Creese, Walter L. The Search for Environment--The Garden City Before
and After. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1966. Rev. ed.,
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992.

Hayden, Dolores. "Model Houses for the Millions: The Making of the
American Suburban Landscape, 1820-2000." Lincoln Institute of Land Policy
Working Paper, WPOODH2, 2000 (available on Lincoln Institute website;
book by the same title forthcoming).

Hise, Greg. "The Airplane and the Garden City: Regional Transformations
during World War II". In World War II and the American Dream: How Wartime
Building Changed A Nation, ed. Donald Albrecht. Cambridge: MIT Press
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Levee, Arleyn. "The Olmsted Brothers' Residential Communities: A Preview
of a Career Legacy." In The Landscape Universe: Historic Designed Landscapes
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Perry, Clarence Arthur. "The Neighborhood Unit." Monograph One, In
Regional Survey of New York and Its Environs, vol.7, Neighborhood and
Community Planning. New York: New York Regional Plan Association, 1929.

Peterson, Jon A. "The City Beautiful Movement: Forgotten Origins and
Lost Meanings." Journal of Urban History 2 (August 1976): 415-34.

_____. City Planning in the United States, 1840-1917: Birth of a Comprehensive
Vision. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, forthcoming.

_____. Advisory Committee on City Planning and Zoning. Model Subdivision
Regulations: A Guide for Local Planning Commissions in the Preparation
of Local Regulations Governing the Subdivision on Land. Washington,
DC: GPO,1932.

U.S. Housing and Home Finance Agency. Suggested Land Subdivision Regulations.
Washington, DC: GPO, February 1952.

Vance, James E. Geography and the Urban Evolution in the San Francisco
Bay. Berkeley: Institute of Governmental Studies, University of California,
1964.

Weiss, Marc A. The Rise of the Community Builders: The American Real
Estate Industry and Urban Land Planning. New York: Columbia University
Press, 1987.

Weitz, Karen J. "Utopian Place Making--The Built Environment in Arts
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Living the Good Life, ed. Kenneth R. Trapp. Oakland, California: Oakland
Museum, and New York: Abbeville Press, 1993, 89-108.

Little, M. Ruth. "The Other Side of the Tracks: The Middle-Class Neighborhoods
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in Vernacular Architecture VII: Exploring Everyday Landscapes, ed. Annmarie
Adams and Sally McMurry. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1997,
268-80.

MacColl, E. Kimbark. The Shaping of a City: Business and Politics
in Portland, Oregon 1885 to 1915. Portland, Oregon: Georgian Press,
1976.

Davis, Timothy. "Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway, Washington, D.C.:
The Evolution of a Contested Urban Landscape." Studies in the History
of Gardens and Designed Landscapes: An International Quarterly 19, no.
2 (April-June 1999).

Leach, Sara Amy. "Fifty Years of Parkway Construction In and Around
the Nation's Capital." In Roadside America: The Automobile in Design
and Culture, ed. Jan Jennings. Ames, Iowa: Iowa State University Press
and the Society for Commercial Archeology, 1990.

Martin, Albro. Railroads Triumphant: The Growth, Rejection and Rebirth
of a Vital American Force. New York: Oxford University Press, 1992.

McShane, Clay, and Joel A. Tarr. "The Centrality of the Horse in the
Nineteenth Century City." In The Making of Urban America, 2nd ed., ed.
Raymond A. Mohl. Wilmington, Delaware: SR Books, 1997.

McShane, Clay. Down the Asphalt Path: The Automobile and the American
City. New York: Columbia University Press, 1995.

McShane, Clay, and Stanley K. Schultz. "To Engineer the Metropolis:
Sewers, Sanitation, and City Planning in Late 19th century America."
Journal of American History 65 (September 1978): 389-411. Also in The
Making of Urban America, ed. Raymond A. Mohl. Wilmington, Delaware:
SR Books, 1988.

Tunnard, Christopher, and Boris Pushkarev. Man-Made America: Chaos
or Control: An Inquiry into Selected Problems of Design in the Urbanized
Landscape. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1966.

Wachs, Martin, and Margaret Crawford. The Car and the City: The Automobile,
the Built Environment, Daily Urban Life. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan
Press, 1996.

Grebler,Leo. The Production of New Housing. New York: Social Science
Research Council, 1950.

Gregory, Daniel P. "Just Add Water: The Productive Partnership between
Thomas Church and Sunset Magazine." In Studies in the History of Gardens
and the Designed Landscape 20, no. 2 (April-June 2000): 120-9.

Gries, John M., and James Ford, eds. House Design, Construction and
Equipment. Proceedings of the President's Conference on Home Building
and Home Ownership. Washington, D.C: National Capital Press, Inc., 1932.

Gutman, Robert. "Architects in the Home Building Industry." In Professionals
and Urban Form, ed. Judith R. Blau, Mark LaGory, and John S. Pipkin.
Albany, New York: State University of New York Press, 1983, 208-23.

Gutman, Robert. The Design of American Housing: A Reappraisal of the
Architect's Role. New York: Publishing Center for Cultural Resources,
1985.

Ierley, Merritt. The Comforts of Home: The American Home and the Evolution
of Modern Convenience. New York: Clarkson Potter, 1999.

Jackson, J. B. "The Domestication of the Garage." In The Necessity
for Ruins and Other Topics. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press,
1980. Also published in Landscape 20, no. 2 (winter 1976): 10-17.

_____. "Housing the Automobile" In Roadside America: The Automobile
in Design and Culture, ed. Jan Jennings. Ames, Iowa: Iowa State University
Press and the Society for Commercial Archeology, 1990, 95-106.

_____. "House and Home in the Arts and Crafts Era: Reforms for Simpler
Living." In "The Art That is Life": The Arts and Crafts Movement in
America, 1875-1920, ed. Wendy Kaplan. Boston: Museum of Fine Arts, 1987,
336-57.

_____. "The Resort to the Rustic: Simple Living and the California
Bungalow." In The Arts and Crafts Movement in California: Living the
Good Life, ed. Kenneth R. Trapp. Oakland, California and New York: Oakland
Museum and Abbeville Press, 1993, 89-107.

Rowe, Peter G., and John Michael Desmond. The Shape and Appearance
of the Modern American Single-Family House. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
Joint Center for Housing Studies of MIT and Harvard University, 1986.

Rubano, Anthony. "The Grille Is Gone: The Rise and Fall of Screen
Block." In Preserving the Recent Past 2, ed. Slaton and Foulks.

Scully, Vincent J., Jr. The Shingle Style and the Stick Style: Architectural
Theory and Design from Downing to the Origins of Wright. New Haven:
Yale University Press, 1955, reprinted 1977 and 1983.

Searing, Helen. "Case Study Houses: In the Grand Modern Tradition."
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Sies, Mary Corbin. "God's Very Kingdom on the Earth': The Design Program
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Stevenson, Katherine Cole, and H. Ward Jandl. Houses by Mail: A Guide
to Houses from Sears Roebuck and Company. New York: National Trust for
Historic Preservation and John Wiley and Sons, 1986.

Sweeting, Adam W. Reading Houses and Building Books: Andrew Jackson
Downing and the Architecture of Popular Antebellum Literature, 1835-1855.
Hanover, New Hampshire: University Press of New England, 1996.

Schweitzer, Robert, and Michael W.R. Davis. America's Favorite Homes:
Mail-Order Catalogues as a Guide to Popular Early 20th-Century Houses.
Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1990.

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_____. "'Divine Excellence': The Arts and Crafts Life in California."
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_____. "The Arts and Crafts after 1918: Ending and Legacy." In The
Arts and Crafts Movement in California: Living the Good Life, ed. Kenneth
R. Trapp. Oakland, California and New York: Oakland Museum and Abbeville
Press, 1993, 233-46.

Wood, Charles B., III. "The New 'Pattern Books' and the Role of the
Agricultural Press." In Prophet with Honor: The Career of Andrew Jackson
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Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks, 1989.

Imbert, Dorothee. "Of Gardens and Houses as Places to Live: Thomas
Church and William Wurster." In Everyday Modernism: The Houses of William
Wurster, ed. Marc Treib. Berkeley: San Francisco Museum of Art and University
of California Press, 1995.

Jackson, John Brinckerhoff. "The Craftsman Style and Technostyle."
In Discovering the Vernacular Landscape. New Haven and London: Yale
University Press, 1984. originally published as "The Craftsman Style,"
VIA, Philadelphia: Graduate School of Fine Arts, University of Pennsylvania,
1975.

Laurie, Michael. "The Gift of Thomas Church: With a Visionary Understanding
of California's Climate and Clients, This Landscape Architect Created
a Lasting Vernacular for Western Garden Design." Horticulture, September
1985.

Leighton, Ann. American Gardens of the Nineteenth Century: For Comfort
and Affluence. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1987.

Lewis, Pierce. "The Making of Vernacular Taste: The Case of Sunset
and Southern Living." In The Vernacular Garden, ed. John Dixon Hunt
and Joachim Wolschke-Bulmahn. Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks, 1993,
107-36.

Major, Judith K. To Live in the New World: A.J. Downing and American
Landscape Gardening. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1997.

O'Malley, Therese. "The Lawn in Early American Landscape and Garden
Design." In The American Lawn--Surface of Everyday Life, ed. Georges
Teyssot. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Architectural Press, with Canadian
Centre for Architecture, 1999.

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Weitz, Karen. "Utopian Place Making: The Built Environment in Arts
and Crafts California." In The Arts and Crafts Movement in California:
Living the Good Life, ed. Kenneth R. Trapp. Oakland, California: Oakland
Museum, and New York: Abbeville Press, 1993, 89-108.

Westmacott, Richard. African-American Gardens and Yards in the Rural
South. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1992.

Cleaveland, Henry W., William Backus, and Samuel D. Backus. Village
and Farm Cottages: A Victorian Style Book. 1856. Reprint of Village
and Farm Cottages: The Requirements of American Village Homes, with
an introduction by David Schuyler, Watkins Glen, New York: American
Life Foundation, 1982.

Cleveland, H.W.S. Landscape Architecture as Applied to the Wants of
the West. 1873. Reprint, with an introduction by Daniel Nadenicek and
Lance M. Neckar, Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press and Library
of American Landscape History, 2001.

Copeland, Robert Morris. Country Life: A Handbook of Agriculture and
Book of Landscape Gardening. 1866. Reprint, Amherst: University of Massachusetts
Press and Library of American Landscape History, forthcoming.

_____. The Architecture of Country Houses, Including Designs for Cottages,
and Farm-houses, and Villas. 1850. Reprint, with an introduction by
J. Stewart Johnson, New York: Dover Publications, 1969.

Downing, Andrew Jackson. Landscape Gardening and Rural Architecture.
7th ed., 1865. Reprint of Treatise on the Theory and Practice of Landscape
Gardening, with an introduction by George B. Tatum, New York: Dover
Publications, 1991.

_____. Rural Essays. 1894. Reprint, New York: DaCapo Press, 1974.

_____. Victorian Cottage Residences. 1873. Reprint of Cottage Residences
or, A Series of Designs for Rural Cottages and Cottage Villas and Their
Gardens and Grounds, with a preface by Adolf K. Placzek, New York: Dover
Publications, 1981.

Eckbo, Garrett. Landscape for Living. 1950. Reprint, Amherst: University
of Massachusetts Press and Library of American Landscape History, forthcoming.

Ford, James, and Katherine Morrow Ford. The Modern House in America.
1940. Reprint of Classic Modern Homes of the Thirties. New York: Dover
Publications, 1989.

Fowler, Orson S. The Octagon House: A Home for All. 1853. Reprint
of A Home for All, or the Gravel Wall and Octagon Mode of Building,
with an introduction by Madeleine B. Stern, New York: Dover Publications,
1973.

Hubbard, Theodora Kimball, and Henry Vincent Hubbard. Our Cities Today
and Tomorrow: A Survey of Planning and Zoning Progress in the United
States. 1929. Reprint, New York: Arno Press, 1974.

Hutcheson, Martha Brookes. The Spirit of the Garden. 1923. Reprint,
with an introduction by Rebecca Warren Davidson, Amherst: University
of Massachusetts Press and Library of Landscape History, 2000.

Jones, Robert T., ed. Authentic Small Houses of the Twenties. 1929.
Reprint of Small Homes of Architectural Distinction: A Book of Suggested
Plans Designed by The Architects' Small House Service Bureau, Inc.,
New York: Dover Publications, 1987.

Miller, Wilhelm. Prairie Spirit of Landscape Gardening. 1915. Reprint,
with an introduction by Christopher Vernon, Amherst: University of Massachusetts
Press and Library of American Landscape History, 2001.

Nolen, John. New Towns for Old. 1927. Reprint, Amherst: University
of Massachusetts Press and Library of American Landscape History, forthcoming.

Palliser, Charles, and George Palliser. The Palliser's Late Victorian.
Reprint, with an introduction by Michael A. Tomlan, Watkins Glen, New
York: American Life Foundation, 1978.

Reed, Samuel Burrage. Victorian Dwellings for Village and Country.
1885. Reprint of Dwellings for Village and Country, New York: Dover
Publications, 1999.

Roberts, Edith A., and Elsa Rehmann. American Plants for American
Gardens. 1929. Reprint, with foreword by Darrel G. Morrison, Athens:
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